Land Rover Present a Rugged and Untamed Absa Cape Epic Route

The 2020 Absa Cape Epic will be The Race That Measures All thanks to a rugged and untamed route. Taking in 647 kilometres and 15 550 metres of climbing it will challenge and reward on the trails from Cape Town to Val de Vie.

The 2020 Absa Cape Epic

From the 15th to the 22nd of March 2020, the Absa Cape Epic will provide 1 300 mountain bikers with their toughest mountain bike challenge of the year. Rugged mountain passes and rocky singletrack ascents, though pristine fynbos await. As do sandy farm roads, between manicured orchards, and bone-rattling descents off ancient mountain ranges. This is the race that measures all on an untamed route, proudly brought to you by Land Rover, the Official Vehicle and Route Partner.

Longer than 2019, but with less metres of vertical ascent, the 2020 route uses the rocky African hinterland to provide the major challenges. It is a course for the nimble mountain goats, rather than the pure power machines. Expect punctures and mechanicals to have their say in the final general classification standings, as any moment of fatigue or undue risk could be punished severely. At 647 kilometres in length, with 15 550 metres of climbing, the bare numbers hide the true story.

Starting on the slopes of Table Mountain National Park, the 2020 Absa Cape Epic provides a familiar introduction to the event during the Prologue. Then it is transfer time, driving north to Ceres, ahead of Stage 1. Returning for the first time in a decade to the Western Cape’s deciduous fruit farming heartland and the famed Eselfontein trails. The opening marathon day sets the tone for the race, distance is rebuffed in favour of rugged technicality – it will be eight days in Land Rover heaven. Rocks, ruts, sand and off-camber corners fill the trails to Val de Vie.

The Queen Stage is early in the race, but Stage 2 is far from being head-and-shoulders more technical than the rest of the route. It explores the infamously tough Witzenberg Valley, a region where only the hard men and women of mountain biking thrive. Stage 3 continues the challenge, with a day back-loaded with climbing; including the race’s toughest ascent inside the final 20 kilometres of the day. The second moving stage, from Tulbagh to Wellington takes riders into a forgotten valley, into the Zuurvlakte.

Once in Wellington the trails become steeper and slightly smoother. The Wild Boar routes, which wind their way through the forested and fynbos covered slopes of the Groenberg and Hawequa mountains, provide much of the trills and many of the challenges too. Stage 5 is the steepest of the race, featuring 35 metres of elevation gain per kilometre, while Stage 6 is the penultimate and second longest of the race.

The Grand Finale takes riders from Wellington to Val de Vie for a fittingly glamourous finish to the World’s Premier Mountain Bike Stage Race. Reaching the last finish line is not easy. The Trail to Val de Vie’s 66 hard kilometres provide an appropriately rugged end to the 2020 Absa Cape Epic and ensure that every finisher earns his or her place in the Book of Legend.

Prologue

Sunday, 15 March

Distance: 20km

Climbing: 600m

Start Location: University of Cape Town

Finish Location: University of Cape Town

Table of the Cape

Cape Town’s iconic flat mountain provides fast and technical, at times, riding for the opening kilometres of the 2020 Absa Cape Epic, in Table Mountain National Park. Returning riders will be well briefed on what to expect; steep gradients heading both up and downhill, massive trail-side crowds and a flutter of pre-race butterflies. The race’s inaugural Land Rover Technical Terrain is provided by the now infamous Plum Pudding.

Stage 1

Monday, 16 March

Distance: 98km

Climbing: 1 800m

Start Location: Ceres

Finish Location: Ceres

Rating: 4 stars

Saddle Up

Not since 2013, has Stage 1 of the Absa Cape Epic dipped below the 100-kilometre mark. It is definitely no play-day though. Hard work lies ahead, to harvest the rewards of the exceptional Eselfontein trails, home to some of the oldest purpose-built mountain biking trails in the country. The Pipeline descent is one of the newer additions to the farm’s trail network and serves as the day’s Land Rover Technical Terrain.

Stage 2

Tuesday, 17 March

Distance: 94km

Climbing: 2 050m

Start Location: Ceres

Finish Location: Saronsberg, Tulbagh

Rating: 5 stars

Forgive My Sins

The Witzenberg Valley is undoubtedly one of mountain biking’s most challenging playgrounds, making Stage 2 a fitting holder for the title of Queen Stage. Sheets of sandstone provide the ultimate testing ground for man, woman and of course machine. No quarter is given by Mother Nature in this fertile valley. For those strong enough not to require one, there are rewards around every kink in the trail. The Skurfberg singletrack climb, through sandstone massifs, provides a challenging entrance to the Witzenberg Valley and the stage’s Land Rover Technical Terrain.

Stage 3

Wednesday, 18 March

Distance: 88km

Climbing: 2 100m

Start Location: Saronsberg, Tulbagh

Finish Location: Saronsberg, Tulbagh

Rating: 4.5 stars

The Winter Summit

With two converging mountain ranges to explore, Stage 3 of the 2020 Absa Cape Epic is not short on climbing. Nestled in the nook between the Groot Winterhoek and the Witzenberg Ranges, the Tulbagh Valley is not hasty to reveal its rewards. The stage features the first Dimension Data Hotspot sprint, down the town’s 300 year old Church Street and arguably the toughest climb in the race. Assegaaibos, a section of virgin trail, provides the Land Rover Technical Terrain.

Stage 4

Thursday, 19 March

Distance: 101km

Climbing: 1 950m

Start Location: Saronsberg, Tulbagh

Finish Location: CPUT, Wellington

Rating: 4 stars

The Forgotten Valley

After three days with precious few free kilometres the transition stage from Saronsberg, in Tulbagh, to the Cape Peninsula University of Technology’s Wellington campus appears on paper to be an easier day. The first 100-kilometre plus stage includes more asphalt than any other in the race. It is however, anything but easy exploring one of the most truly untamed valleys in the Western Cape. A low range 4×4 worthy stretch of dual track, the Bull Run, is the designated Land Rover Technical Terrain.

Stage 5

Friday, 20 March

Distance: 85km

Climbing: 2 900m

Start Location: CPUT, Wellington

Finish Location: CPUT, Wellington

Rating: 4.5 stars

The Only Way Is Up

Short and brutally steep, on exhausted legs, Stage 5 will be a major physical and psychological hurdle on the trail to Val de Vie. In the past, stages like these have been dubbed play days, but there is little playful about this intense test. Challenging climbs are followed by white-knuckle singletrack descents. The Land Rover Technical Terrain – the Full Monty – cannot be ridden stripped of skill and wits so conserve your energy for the stage’s last dance.

Stage 6

Saturday, 21 March

Distance: 95km

Climbing: 2 300m

Start Location: CPUT, Wellington

Finish Location: CPUT, Wellington

Rating: 4 stars

Into The Wild

A saw tooth profile is exactly what riders do not want to see, come the penultimate day of the Absa Cape Epic. Riding through a private nature reserve, the presence of a zebra, eland, springbok and giraffe will serve as welcome distraction from aching legs. Rocky Horror mid-way through the stage, features the most fearsome name of any Land Rover Technical Terrain in the race and proves the theory of nominative determinism.

Stage 7

Sunday, 22 March

Distance: 66km

Climbing: 1 850m

Start Location: CPUT, Wellington

Finish Location: Val de Vie

Rating: 3.5 stars

The Trail to Val de Vie

Between Wellington and Val de Vie lie a final 66 kilometres of Untamed mountain biking. A last test to ensure that no finisher’s medal is handed over, without the realisation being driven home, that it was hard-earned. Bone Rattler marks the 2020 Grand Finale’s Land Rover Technical Terrain, after which it is a relatively smooth ride through Val de Vie’s immaculate grounds and lawns and into the Book of Legend.